A top editor of a weekly newspaper who called for changes to China’s onerous household registration system, which restricts where people can live, has been forced out of his job in a fresh warning that journalists who challenge government policy too directly face retribution.
The dismissed journalist, Zhang Hong (張宏), had been deputy editor in chief of the Web site of the Economic Observer, which is based in Beijing.
Two Chinese media sources reached by telephone said he was fired because of his criticism of the registration system, which ties people to their parents’ hometown if they want government services.
Reached by telephone on Tuesday night, Zhang would not comment on his dismissal. But in a letter published on Tuesday night on the Web site of the Wall Street Journal, Zhang wrote: “I was punished accordingly; other colleagues and media partners also felt repercussions.”
He also wrote in the letter that his March 1 editorial had been “the product of a few editors working behind closed doors, but the stir it created went beyond our initial expectations.”
“We believe in people born to be free and people possessing the right to migrate freely,” the editorial said.
The collapse of the Swiss Birch glacier serves as a chilling warning of the escalating dangers faced by communities worldwide living under the shadow of fragile ice, particularly in Asia, experts said. Footage of the collapse on Wednesday showed a huge cloud of ice and rubble hurtling down the mountainside into the hamlet of Blatten. Swiss Development Cooperation disaster risk reduction adviser Ali Neumann said that while the role of climate change in the case of Blatten “still needs to be investigated,” the wider impacts were clear on the cryosphere — the part of the world covered by frozen water. “Climate change and
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